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Classic Rock Album Olympics

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Classic Rock Album Olympics
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25 episodes

  • Classic Rock Album Olympics

    Silk Degrees by Boz Scaggs...Episode #24

    2026-05-25 | 57 mins.
    In episode # 24 of Classic Rock Album Olympics music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez dig into Silk Degrees by Boz Scaggs and award their gold, silver and bronze medals accordingly.

    Medal Winners

    Georgia

    Harbor
    Lights

    Lido
    Shuffle

    We’re
    All Alone

    Bonus Tracks

    We
    Were Always Sweethearts – Boz

    Finding
    Her – Boz

    Dinah
    Flo – Boz

    Near
    You - Boz

    Brandy
    (You’re A Fine Girl) – Looking Glass

    Look
    What You’ve Done To Me – Boz

    Harbor
    Lights – Platters

    Low
    Down - Boz

    Love
    Me Tomorrow - Boz

    Sooner
    Or Later – Grass Roots

    Long
    Tall Glasses (I Can Dance) – Leo Sayer

    What
    Do You Want The Girl To Do – Boz

    Lone
    Me A Dime – Boz

    Jump
    Street – Boz

     

    Silk Degrees by Boz Scaggs was released in March 1976 and became the defining album of his career, blending blue-eyed soul, smooth pop, and West Coast R&B into a polished, radio-friendly sound that helped define
    mid-1970s adult contemporary music.

    Recorded at CBS Studios in San Francisco, the album benefited from a group of top-tier session musicians, many of whom would soon form Toto, including David Paich (keyboards), Jeff Porcaro (drums), and David
    Hungate (bass), along with guitarist Fred Tackett. Their tight, groove-oriented playing gave the record its sleek, sophisticated feel.

    The album was produced by Joe Wissert, whose clean, layered production emphasized rhythm, melody, and Scaggs’ smooth vocal delivery.

    Several hit singles emerged, including “Lowdown,” “Lido Shuffle,” “What Can I Say,” and “It’s Over,” with “Lowdown” becoming the biggest success, reaching #3 on the Billboard Hot 100.  “Lido Shuffle” also performed strongly, reaching the Top 20, helping sustain the album’s momentum across radio formats.

    Silk Degrees peaked at #2 on the Billboard 200 and became a multi-platinum success, eventually selling over five million copies in the United States. Its crossover appeal—bridging pop, R&B, and soft rock—made it a staple of FM radio and a key influence on the emerging yacht rock sound.

    Critically and commercially, the album marked the high point of Scaggs’ mainstream popularity, cementing his place in 1970s music and showcasing a seamless blend of craftsmanship, musicianship, and accessibility.

    Track Listing

    Side One

    What Can I Say

    Georgia

    Jump Street

    What Do You Want The Girl To Do

    Harbor Lights

    Side Two

    Lowdown

    It’s Over

    Love Me Tomorrow

    Lido Shuffle

    We’re All Alone

     

    Hashtags

    #BozScaggs #SilkDegrees #1970sMusic #YachtRock
    #ClassicAlbums #Lowdown #LidoShuffle

    Contact Info

    Website: ⁠⁠Gary Wenstrup⁠⁠

    Podcast Website: ⁠⁠Home - Classic Rock Album Olympics⁠⁠

    YouTube: ⁠⁠(556) Classic Rock
    Album Olympics - YouTube⁠⁠

    Facebook: ⁠⁠(7) Facebook⁠⁠

    Podcast Facebook: ⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠

    LinkedIn: ⁠⁠(17) Gary Wenstrup | LinkedIn⁠

    Intro & Outro Music by Flwers
    ⁠Flwers⁠
    Something About The Beatles Podcast

    ⁠somethingaboutthebeatles.com⁠

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
  • Classic Rock Album Olympics

    London Calling by The Clash...Episode #23

    2026-05-12 | 1h 7 mins.
    In episode #23 of Classic Rock Album Olympics music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez discuss London Calling by The Clash and award their gold, silver and bronze medals accordingly.

    Medal Winners

    Lost
    In The Supermarket

    Spanish
    Bombs

    The
    Right Profile

    Rudie
    Can’t Fail

    Clampdown

    Train
    In Vain  

     London Calling by The Clash was released in the U.S. in January 1980, marking a turning point not just for the band but for late-1970s rock. Expanding far beyond their early punk sound, the double album blends reggae, ska, rockabilly, R&B, and pop into a politically charged yet musically adventurous statement that captured the turbulence of the era—economic decline, nuclear anxiety, and social unrest—while still delivering sharp songwriting and energy. 

    The album is considered the most “musical” punk album and its most ambitious.

    The core lineup featured Joe Strummer (lead vocals, rhythm guitar + lyrics), Mick Jones (lead guitar, vocals + music), Paul Simonon (bass), and Topper Headon (drums). The album was produced by Guy Stevens with mostly just 1 or 2 takes for each song. 

    While the album only reached #27 on the U.S. Billboard 200, its reputation grew steadily, and it is now widely regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time.  The lone single released from the album in the U.S. was “Train in Vain.” The song was added at the last minute and unlisted on early pressings, reaching #23 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Critically, London Calling has been celebrated for its ambition and range, often cited alongside landmark albums in rock history for its fusion of genres and its ability to translate political urgency into compelling music.

    Its iconic cover—featuring Simonon smashing his bass, photographed
    by Pennie Smith—echoes the design of Elvis Presley’s debut album, visually linking past and present while signaling a reinvention of rock tradition.

    Original album title: The Last Testament

    For more information: Route 19 Revisited: The Clash and
    London Calling by Marcus Gray

    Bonus Tracks

    Vanilla
    Tapes – The Clash

    London
    Calling - The Clash

    Guns
    Of Brixton – The Clash

    Clampdown
    – Bruce Springsteen

    The
    Clash - Live on Fridays 1980

     

    Track Listing

    Side One

    London Calling

    Brand New Cadillac

    Jimmy Jazz

    Hateful

    Rudie Can’t Fail

    Side Two

    Spanish Bombs

    The Right Profile

    Clampdown

    The Guns of Brixton

    Side Three

    Wrong ‘Em Boyo

    Death Or Glory

    Koka Kola

    The Card Cheat

    Side Four

    Lover’s Rock

    Four Horsemen

    I’m Not Down

    Revolution Rock

    Train In Vain    

    Hashtags  

    #TheClash #LondonCalling #PunkRock #ClassicAlbums
    #MusicHistory #JoeStrummer #MickJones #PaulSimonon #TopperHeadon

    Contact Info

    Website: ⁠⁠Gary Wenstrup⁠⁠

    Podcast Website: ⁠⁠Home - Classic Rock Album Olympics⁠⁠

    YouTube: ⁠⁠(556) Classic Rock
    Album Olympics - YouTube⁠⁠

    Facebook: ⁠⁠(7) Facebook⁠⁠

    Podcast Facebook: ⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠

    LinkedIn: ⁠⁠(17) Gary Wenstrup | LinkedIn⁠

    Intro & Outro Music by Flwers
    ⁠Flwers⁠
    Something About The Beatles Podcast

    ⁠somethingaboutthebeatles.com

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
  • Classic Rock Album Olympics

    Tapestry by Carole King...Episode #22

    2026-04-28 | 1h 6 mins.
    In this episode of Classic Rock Album Olympics music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez discuss and award their gold, silver and bronze medals for Tapestry by Carole King.

    Tapestry released February 1971 is widely regarded as a landmark album of the singer/songwriter era, blending introspective lyrics with rich, melodic piano-driven pop and soft rock.  It spent 4 months (!) at #1 and stayed on the album charts for 6 ½ years.

    The album marked King’s breakthrough as a solo artist after years of writing hits for others, showcasing her distinctive voice and emotionally resonant songwriting. With understated production by Lou Adler,
    Tapestry featured Danny Kortchmar on guitar, Russ Kunkel and Joel O’Brien drums and Charlie Larkey on bass.  The band provided a warm, intimate foundation for King’s piano and vocals.

    “It’s Too Late” backed with “I Feel the Earth Move” reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and “So Far Away” reached #14.  The album included Carole’s versions of hits she wrote for others including Aretha’s “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” the Shirelles’ “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” and James Taylor’s only #1 song “You’ve Got A Friend.”

    The album earned four Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, Record of the Year, and Song of the Year. 

    Tapestry’s combination of personal lyrics, melodic sophistication, and subtle production helped define early 1970s pop.  Importantly, it was a breakthrough for female singer/songwriters the world over.

    Medal Winners

    Beautiful

    It’s
    Too Late

    Home
    Again

    So
    Far Away

    Bonus Tracks

    Kicks
    – Paul Revere & Raiders

    Porpoise
    Song – Monkees

    Pleasant
    Valley Sunday – Monkees

    (You
    Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman – Aretha Franklin

    You’ve
    Got A Friend – James Taylor

    Will
    You Love Me Tomorrow – Shirelles

    For
    No One – Beatles

    Breaking
    Up Is Hard To Do – Neil Sedaka (1970s Version)

    Tapestry
    – Carole King

    Way
    Over Yonder – Carole King

    Smackwater
    Jack – Carole King

    One
    Fine Day – Carole King

    Jazzman
    – Carole King

    CIA
    Man – Fugs

    Track Listing

    Side One

    I Feel The Earth move

    It’s Too Late

    So Far Away

    Home Again

    Beautiful

    Way Over Yonder

    Side Two

    You’ve Got A Friend

    Where You Lead

    Will You Love Me Tomorrow

    Smackwater Jack

    Tapestry

    (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman

    Something About The Beatles Podcast

     

    Hashtags

    #Tapestry #CaroleKing #SingerSongwriter #ClassicRock
    #1970sMusic #PianoPop #SongwritingMasterclass #BillboardTopAlbum #IconicRecords
    #MusicHistory

    Contact Info

    Website: ⁠⁠Gary Wenstrup⁠⁠

    Podcast Website: ⁠⁠Home - Classic Rock Album Olympics⁠⁠

    YouTube: ⁠⁠(556) Classic Rock
    Album Olympics - YouTube⁠⁠

    Facebook: ⁠⁠(7) Facebook⁠⁠

    Podcast Facebook: ⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠

    LinkedIn: ⁠⁠(17) Gary Wenstrup | LinkedIn⁠

    Intro & Outro Music by Flwers
    Flwers

    Something About The Beatles Podcast

    somethingaboutthebeatles.com

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
  • Classic Rock Album Olympics

    Pet Sounds by The Beach Boys...Episode #21

    2026-04-14 | 1h 11 mins.
    Pet Sounds, released on May 16, 1966, stands as The Beach Boys’ most ambitious and influential album—a deeply personal statement from Brian Wilson that reshaped the possibilities of pop music.

    The album reached No. 10 on the Billboard 200 in the United States, a respectable showing at the time, though far below the group’s earlier surf-era dominance. In the United Kingdom, however, it soared to No. 2 and was embraced immediately as a masterpiece.

    Over time, its stature eclipsed its initial commercial performance, and it is now routinely ranked among the greatest albums ever recorded.

    Medal Winners

    Wouldn’t
    It Be Nice

    Here
    Today

    I
    Just Wasn’t Made For These Times

    God
    Only Knows

    Caroline,
    No

     

    Bonus Tracks

    The
    Little Girl I Once Knew – Beach Boys

    Barbara
    Ann – Beach Boys

    Paint
    It Black – Rolling Stones

    8
    Miles High – Byrds

    Sloop
    John B – Beach Boys

    Train
    In The Distance – Paul Simon

    Something
    – Beatles

    The
    Letter – Box Tops

    Surfs
    Up – Beach Boys

     Pet Sounds produced three singles. “Caroline, No,” released under Brian Wilson’s name prior to the album, peaked at No. 32 on the Billboard Hot 100. “Sloop John B,” a traditional Bahamian folk song became the album’s biggest American hit, reaching No. 3. “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” climbed to No. 8 with “God Only Knows” as the B-side. "God Only Knows" is now one of the most revered love songs in popular music history.

    The primary composer and producer behind Pet Sounds was Brian Wilson, who collaborated on lyrics with Tony Asher.  The album marked a shift from the group’s earlier car-and-surf themes to introspective explorations of vulnerability, doubt, romantic idealism, and emotional maturity. Songs like “You Still Believe in Me,” “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder),” and “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times” revealed a fragile emotional honesty rarely heard in mid-1960s pop.

    Instrumentation on Pet Sounds was revolutionary. Wilson employed members of the famed Los Angeles session collective known as The Wrecking Crew to realize his intricate arrangements. Traditional rock
    instruments were blended with orchestral textures and unconventional sounds: harpsichord, tack piano, theremin, French horn, bass harmonica, sleigh bells, bicycle bells and empty bottles used as percussion.  The complex vocal harmonies—long a Beach Boys hallmark—were arranged with unprecedented sophistication.

    Historically, Pet Sounds is widely viewed as one of the first true “album statements” in rock, helping legitimize the LP as an artistic format rather than merely a collection of singles. The album’s emotional coherence and sonic experimentation directly influenced The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Though it was initially considered a commercial disappointment in the U.S., its reputation grew steadily, and it is now preserved in the National Recording Registry and consistently ranks at or near No. 1 on critics’ all-time album lists. Pet Sounds signaled the maturation of rock into art—intimate, orchestral, and psychologically complex.

    Track Listing

    Side One

    Wouldn’t It Be Nice

    You Still Believe In Me

    That’s Not Me

    Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)

    I’m Waiting For The Day

    Let’s Go Away For Awhile

    Sloop John B

    Side Two

    God Only Knows

    I Know There’s An Answer

    Here Today

    I Just wasn’t Made For These Times

    Pet Sounds

    Caroline, No

     

    #PetSounds #TheBeachBoys #BrianWilson #TonyAsher
    #GodOnlyKnows #WouldntItBeNice #1966Music #ClassicAlbums #BaroquePop
    #StudioInnovation #RockHistory

     

    Revolver:
    How The Beatles Reimagined Rock ‘n’ Roll by Robert Rodriguez

    somethingaboutthebeatles.com

    Contact Info

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠Gary Wenstrup⁠⁠⁠

    Podcast Website: ⁠⁠⁠Home - Classic Rock Album Olympics⁠⁠⁠

    YouTube: ⁠⁠⁠(556) Classic Rock
    Album Olympics - YouTube⁠⁠⁠

    Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠(7) Facebook⁠⁠⁠

    Podcast Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠

    LinkedIn: ⁠⁠⁠(17) Gary Wenstrup | LinkedIn⁠

    Intro & Outro Music by Flwers
    Flwers

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
  • Classic Rock Album Olympics

    Rough Mix by Pete Townshend & Ronnie Lane...Episode #20

    2026-04-01 | 57 mins.
    In this episode of Classic Rock Album Olympics music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez smoothly assess Rough Mix by Pete
    Townshend and Ronnie Lane and share which songs from the album earn their gold, silver and bronze medals.

    Medal Winners

    Keep
    Me Turning

    Annie

    April
    Fool

    My
    Baby Gives It Away

    Heart
    To Hand Onto

    Bonus Tracks

    Something
    In The Air – Thunderclap Newman

    Rough
    Mix

    Misunderstood

    Street
    In The City

    Till
    The Rivers All Run Dry

    There’s A Heartache
    Following Me – Jim Reeves

    He’ll Have To Go – Jim
    Reeves 

    Released in 1977 Rough Mix is a collaborative studio album
    by Pete Townshend — the guitarist and principal songwriter of The Who — and Ronnie Lane, the former bassist and singer from Small Faces and Faces.  Unlike the arena rock that defined much of Townshend’s work with The Who or the soulful R&B-tinged rock of Lane’s earlier bands, Rough Mix explores a more roots-oriented blend of rock, British folk rock, and heartfelt singer-songwriter material that reflects both artists stepping outside their band identities.

    The album showcased both Townshend and Lane as co-lead vocalists and multi-instrumentalists, with Townshend contributing guitars and songwriting and Lane bringing his melodic bass playing, acoustic sensibilities, and songwriting presence; the sessions also featured contributions from notable musicians such as John Entwistle of The Who, Eric Clapton on dobro and guitar, and Charlie Watts of The Rolling Stones on drums, among others, adding depth and variety to the arrangements.

    Rough Mix was a modest success reaching #45 on the US Billboard 200.

    In the US “My Baby Gives It Away” (with “April Fool” as its B-side) and “Keep Me Turning” (backed by “Nowhere to Run”) were released as singles.  Neither became a hit.

    Rough Mix holds a special place in both artists’ catalogs as a creative detour that revealed different facets of their songwriting and musical identities.  The album is a meeting of kindred spirits from the British rock scene and appreciated by fans for its warm interplay and musical generosity.

    Track Listing

    Side One

    My Baby Gives It Away

    Nowhere To Run

    Rough Mix

    Annie

    Keep me Turning

    Catmelody

    Side Two

    Misunderstood

    April Fool

    Street In the City

    Heart To Hang Onto

    Till The Rivers All Run Dry

    Hashtags capturing its enduring appeal include #RoughMix,
    #PeteTownshend, #RonnieLane, #ClassicRock, #1977Albums, and #FolkRockCollab.

    Contact Info

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠Gary Wenstrup⁠⁠⁠

    Podcast Website: ⁠⁠⁠Home - Classic Rock Album Olympics⁠⁠⁠

    YouTube: ⁠⁠⁠(556) Classic Rock
    Album Olympics - YouTube⁠⁠⁠

    Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠(7) Facebook⁠⁠⁠

    Podcast Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠

    LinkedIn: ⁠⁠⁠(17) Gary Wenstrup | LinkedIn⁠⁠

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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About Classic Rock Album Olympics
The CLASSIC ROCK ALBUM OLYMPICS is a podcast celebrating the most popular albums of the 1960s, 70s and 80s. In each episode music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez will pull a classic rock album off the shelf and discuss which songs earn our gold, silver and bronze medals. It’s a fun, insightful and passionate journey through some of the greatest albums of all-time. Let the games begin!
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